Word: localize
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Cambridge's drive to rid local news-stands of cheap editions of so-called "sex books" may end in court prosecutions for several of the banned volumes, it was learned yesterday...
...Well, I don't know. Mr. Capp has his strip in the Globe... we often have local newspapermen in the audience... er, I think we better lay off that...
...written in the same hoarse voice. It begins with a strike at a big Chicago mail-order house, and ends ten years later with another strike at the same place. Between these two points, Author Motley has strung three plots. Jim Norris rises to the leader ship of the local union, almost cracks up psychologically (he has an urge to molest children), but pulls himself together in time to lead the second strike. Don Lockwood, a handsome Polish boy (born Kosinski), is torn between labor politics and the Chicago smart set; he gets to be a Democratic Party boss...
...point last spring there was a rumor around the Square that the Harvard Dramatic Club and the Harvard Theatre Group were going to unite forces for the production of a play called "Billy Budd." The announcement was greeted with huzzahs by local theatre-goers. At last it appeared possible to encourage dramatics at Harvard, see several good plays, and not have to go to the theatre four times in a period of two weeks...
...CRIMSON out-scored the Yale Daily News 2 to 1 Saturday in New Haven. The local journalistic moguls produced a parody announcing the resignation of Eli Athletic Director Robert Hall, which was followed by an extra deploring the CRIMSON's taste in its original parody. This second effort was produced by CRIMSON graduate editors Finally, 20 minutes after the game, the News itself got out a regular extra...